Psychological Issues in Eyewitness Identification

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child witness identification
Confidence Accuracy Relationship
Context Reinstatement
Elderly Eyewitnesses
elderly memory assessment
Elderly Witnesses
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experimental psychology in legal settings
Exposure Time
Eyewitness Memory
Eyewitness Psychology
Face Recognition
facial image reconstruction
false
False Identifications
Galley Slave
Identification Accuracy
identifications
Innocent Suspect
line
lineup procedure analysis
Live Line Up
Live Parade
memory
Memory Development
Mock Witnesses
photo
Photo Arrays
Photo Graph
Photo Spread
Prob Ability
Random Assignment
spreads
target
Target Absent Line Ups
Target Present Line Ups
testimony
ups
voice lineup methodology
Weapon Focus Effect
witness memory reliability
Young Man

Product details

  • ISBN 9780805811988
  • Weight: 770g
  • Dimensions: 152 x 229mm
  • Publication Date: 01 Oct 1995
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Inc
  • Publication City/Country: US
  • Product Form: Hardback
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Why do police officers, investigators, prosecutors, judges, and others with an interest in eliciting accurate memory-based testimony need to inform themselves of the research literature in experimental psychology that addresses the question of witness memory? The answer is straightforward, from the perspective of a simple cost/benefit analysis. As with so many matters in the administration of public funds, effectiveness holds important rewards. Those who investigate crimes and decide which line of investigation to pursue and which line to postpone or set aside, necessarily make judgments about the likely guilt of suspects based on the information at hand. If they can make these judgments with a high degree of accuracy, everyone benefits.

For many cases eyewitness identification is an important component of evidence, prosecution, and plea negotiation. If witness identification is correctly implemented, investigators and prosecutors can make their judgments effectively, and focus their resources more efficiently. A major component of effectiveness requires avoiding expending scarce resources on erroneous prosecutions. It is in everyone's interest to make the best use of the memory of witnesses: to preserve it without changing it; to render it maximally accessible; to provide an environment in which witnesses feel free to report their recollections; and to accurately assess the probable validity of the witness's report, regardless of the witness's certainty or doubts about its accuracy.

This volume gathers evidence from various research domains on eyewitness testimony. Although many of the studies discussed deal with eyewitness identification, it is noteworthy that many of them also touch upon other areas of concern to eyewitness researchers, including chapters on:

*voice recognition by humans and computers, with particularly detailed instructions on conducting voice "lineup,"
*differential aspects of recognition memory in children,
*elderly eyewitness' memory,
*problems of cross-racial identification,
*psychological aspects of facial image reconstruction techniques,
*person descriptions,
*particular benefits of reinstating context as a means to improve eyewitness memory,
*problems associated with various research paradigms in the eyewitness arena, and
*recommendations on how to conduct lineups and photospreads and their proper evaluation.

Differentiated from other literature on this topic by its non-technical language and accessibility to non-professionals, this volume covers a great deal of ground, raises a host of questions, settles some others, and points the way to more effective use and evaluation of what eyewitnesses have to say.

Siegfried L. Sporer, Roy S. Malpass, Guenter Koehnken